Evidence Matters Contact
Evidence Matters Contact is the main page for submitting a claim for review, requesting a correction, or asking a question about the method.
For claim reviews, include the exact quote, who said it, where it appeared, and your strongest source link or screenshot.
Evidence Matters Contact for claim review
Send the exact claim, who said it, where it appeared, and the strongest source you have.
Evidence Matters Contact for correction requests
Send the page link, what is wrong, what should replace it, and the source that supports your correction.
Evidence Matters Contact for process questions
Tell us what part of the method is unclear and what you want explained.
Evidence Matters Contact form
Use the Evidence Matters Contact form for claim submissions, correction requests, and process questions. For claim reviews, include the exact quote, who said it, where it appeared, and your strongest source link.
Subject line
Use a clear subject like “2020 election claim” or “crime stats claim.”
Best evidence
Direct links are better than screenshots. Full context is better than clipped context.
What slows review
Vague descriptions, missing links, and no exact quote make review harder.
Why Evidence Matters Contact works best with specifics
This page works best when you include the claim exactly as it was made and the strongest source you have. That might be a direct link, a court filing, a full video, a transcript, an official report, or a screenshot when nothing else is available.
Be specific. Instead of saying “this whole thing is false,” identify the exact sentence, image, clip, or allegation you want reviewed. That makes it possible to compare the claim to the actual record.
If your message is a correction request, send the page URL, the part you believe is wrong, what should replace it, and the source that supports your correction. If your message is about the process, say which step is unclear so the answer can be direct and useful.
It helps to separate what you know from what you suspect. Clear uncertainty is easier to work with than overstated certainty. A short, direct note with one solid source is usually more helpful than a long message full of side arguments.
If the issue involves a video, send the full clip when possible, not just the viral cut. If it involves a quote, include the full quote and where it came from. If it involves a document, link the document itself instead of commentary about the document.
Evidence Matters Contact works best when one message focuses on one claim, one correction, or one process issue at a time. That makes it easier to compare what was said to what the record actually shows.
